* more swagger docs + other changes * go fmt
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Quick and Dirty
This is the quick and dirty getting started guide. It's not recommended to run GtS like this in production, but if you want to quickly get a server up and running, this is a good way to do it.
1: Domain Name
Get a domain name -- Namecheap is a good place to do this, but you can use any domain name registrar that lets you manage your own DNS.
2: VPS
Spin yourself up a cheap VPS with Linux running on it, or get a homeserver ready with Ubuntu Server or something similar.
Hostwinds is a good option here: it's cheap and they throw in a static IP address for free.
This guide won't go into running UFW and Fail2Ban but you absolutely should do that. Leave ports 443
and 80
open.
3: DNS
Point your domain name towards the server you just spun up.
4: Postgres
Install Postgres on your server and run it.
If you have Docker installed on your server, this is as easy as running:
docker run -d --network host --user postgres -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=some_password postgres
5: Build the Binary
On your local machine (not your server), with Go installed, clone the GoToSocial repository, and build the binary with the provided build script:
./build.sh
If you need to build for a different architecture other than the one you're running the build on (eg., you're running on a Raspberry Pi but building on an amd64 machine), you can put set GOOS
or GOARCH
environment variables before running the build script, eg:
GOARCH=arm64 ./build.sh
6: Prepare VPS
On the VPS or your homeserver, make the directory that GoToSocial will run from, and the directory it will use as storage:
mkdir /gotosocial && mkdir /gotosocial/storage
7: Copy Binary
Copy your binary from your local machine onto the VPS, using something like the following command (where example.org
is the domain you set up in step 1):
scp ./gotosocial root@example.org:/gotosocial/gotosocial
Replace root
with whatever user you're actually running on your remote server (you wouldn't run as root right? ;).
8: Copy Web Dir
GoToSocial uses some web templates and static assets, so you need to copy these over to your VPS as well (where example.org
is the domain you set up in step 1):
scp -r ./web root@example.org:/gotosocial/
9: Run the Binary
Everything is in place now.
First cd into the directory you created on your remote machine in step 6:
cd /gotosocial
Then start the GoToSocial server with the following command (where example.org
is the domain you set up in step 1, and some_password
is the password you set for Postgres in step 4):
./gotosocial --host example.org --port 443 --storage-serve-host example.org --letsencrypt-enabled=true server start
The server should now start up and you should be able to access the splash page by navigating to your domain in the browser. Note that it might take up to a minute or so for your LetsEncrypt certificates to be created for the first time, so refresh a few times if necessary.
Note that for this example we're assuming that we're allowed to run on port 443 (standard https port), and that nothing else is running on this port.
10: Create and confirm your user
You can use the GoToSocial binary to also create, confirm, and promote your user account.
Create
Run the following command to create a new account:
./gotosocial --host example.org admin account create --username some_username --email some_email@whatever.org --password SOME_PASSWORD
In the above command, replace example.org
with your domain, some_username
with your desired username, some_email@whatever.org
with the email address you want to associate with your account, and SOME_PASSWORD
with a secure password.
Confirm
Run the following command to confirm the account you just created:
./gotosocial --host example.org admin account confirm --username some_username
Replace example.org
with your domain and some_username
with the username of the account you just created.
Promote
If you want your user to have admin rights, you can promote them using a similar command:
./gotosocial --host example.org admin account promote --username some_username
Replace example.org
with your domain and some_username
with the username of the account you just created.
11. Login!
You should now be able to log in to your instance using the email address and password of the account you just created. We recommend using Pinafore or Tusky for this.